During a recent appearance on the StarTalk
Radio Show, Real Time host Bill Maher expressed his desire
to see more people killed via abortion, suicides and the death penalty
because "the planet is too crowded and we need to promote death."

Asked by host Neil deGrasse Tyson what
he thought about the death penalty and abortion, Maher re-affirmed his
support for both, remarking, "The Pope is consistently pro-life,
I am consistently pro-death."

Expressing how he was pro-death penalty,
Maher said, "my motto is let's kill the right people."

Explaining how he knew many people who
felt the same, Maher went on to say that "people who've earned
it" deserved to die, remarking, "kill the right people."

The HBO host emphasized how he disagreed
with the notion that all life is precious, referring to an argument
made by Rick Santorum that prenatal testing should not be covered by
the government because it encourages people to have abortions.

"I don't think there's anything
wrong with that," said Maher, expressing his support for abortion
and noting, "It's not that hard to create life, it's teeming everywhere,
it's something a dog can do."

Maher's eugenicist views are shared
by many liberals and others who consider themselves to be part of the
elite.

As
we highlighted in a separate article today, a biotech scientist
who works for a well known company recently contacted health blogger
Anthony Gucciardi to express his joy at how genetically modified food
causes infertility.

"If this **** causes infertility…
Awesome!!" wrote the scientist, adding, "The world is over-populated,
and people need to stop having children. This is one of earth’s
largest problems....This is why GMO is actually saving the planet."

Maher's overpopulation schtick is not
only highly offensive - it is completely inaccurate.

The
UN Population Division's own figures show that by 2020, that population
is set to stabilize in 2020 and then drop dramatically after 2050 and
indeed that underpopulation is going to be the real long term issue.
As
the Economist reported, “Fertility is falling and families
are shrinking in places— such as Brazil, Indonesia, and even parts
of India—that people think of as teeming with children. As our
briefing shows, the fertility rate of half the world is now 2.1 or less—the
magic number that is consistent with a stable population and is usually
called “the replacement rate of fertility”. Sometime between
2020 and 2050 the world’s fertility rate will fall below the global
replacement rate.”